CS 71 
.H341 
1907 
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PRESENTED BY 



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ALSO AVAILABLE ON MICROFILM # 



ANCESTRY 



OF 



COL. JOHN HAKVEY, 



OF 



NORTELWOOD, NEW HAMPSHIRE, 



AN OFFICER OF THE LINE IN THE WAR OF THE REVOLUTION, 
AND AN ORIGINAL MEMBER OF THE NEW HAMP- 
SHIRE SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 



BY 

JOHN HARVEY TREAT, A. M. 



■ < 



BOSTON : 
PRIVATELY PRINTED. 

1907. 



1 *:C* 




Gilt, 

Author. 

(P«rso<\). 

5 Jl iJ07 



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ANCESTRY 



OF 



COL. JOHN HARVEY. 



INTEODUCTION. 



There were two persons in Boston at the same time bearing 
the name of William Harvey. One of them lived and died 
there ; the other subsequently removed to Taunton. Our Col. 
John Harvey was descended from William Harvey of Boston. 

Oscar Jewell Harvey, author of " The Harvey Book," of the 
Taunton Line, Wilkesbarre, Penn., 1899, says: 

" I think it very clearly proved by the public records herein 
referred to, and by other records, that there was no William 
Harvey residing at Plymouth in 1639, and that the two Will- 
iams ' then in New England,' were (1) William of Taunton, 
whose wife was Joanna Hucker, and (2) William of Boston, 
who married Martha Copp." (Page 35.) 

William Harvey of Taunton married Joanna Hucker of Co- 
hannet, April 2, 1639, and resided for some years in Boston. 

From what part of England William Harvey came is not 
known. We have a clue from the Will of Agnes Clarke of 
Ayshill, or Ashill, Somerset, three miles west of Ilminster, and 

3 



4 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

nine miles east of Taunton, widow, dated Oct. 20, 1647, proved 
May 10, 1648. 

I give and bequeath unto William Harvey the son of Thomas 
Harvey deceased, my kinsman, now in New England, eighteen 

pounds, which sum is to be paid as soon as it can be recovered, 

if he shall come to demand it at any time within four years, but if 
he come not then my will is that William Harvey the son of James 
Harvey shall have the said money at such time as he shall be of 
lawful age to give a discharge. I give to the said William son of 
James Harvey fifteen pounds when of age. I give and be- 
queath unto William Harvey in New England all my household 
stuff during his life, if he come to claim it, and after his decease to 
remain in the house to the use of James Harvey, his brother, and 
the said James to make use of it until William, his brother, shall 
come to claim it. (N. E. Hist. Geneal. Register, xlvi : p. 453 ; 
Waters' Gleanings in Eng., i : p. 645.) 

She mentions Elizabeth Harvey, wife of Richard Harvey " my 
kinsman," whom she makes her sole executor and to whom she 
leaves the residue of her estate. The name of her husband was 
John Clarke. 

Ashill Church Registers begin 1558 : unfortunately the Reg- 
ister of births, marriages and burials from 1628 to 1653 has 
been lost. The entries for 1625-1628 are almost illegible. 
There seem to have been three families of name of Harvie at 
Ashill, — Richard, Thomas and Nicolas. But for the loss of 
these Registers we might have been able, perhaps, to connect 
the Family with the Parish of Ashill. The Rev. W. R. Hart- 
wright, Vicar of Pitminster, Eng., has kindly made for me a 
transcript of the records. 

Baptisms. 

Agnes, dau. Thomas Harvie, Jan. 20, 1599. 
Thomasine, dau. Thomas Harvie, March 12, 1601. 
Mary, dau. Nicolas Harvie, June 16, 1601. 



Introduction. 5 

Matthew, son Thomas Harvie, July 12, 1603. 
Alice, dan. Thomas Harvie, July 11, 1609. 
Mary, dau. Thomas Harvie, June 11, 1613. 
James, son Thomas Harvie, April 1, 1615. 

Marriages. 

Thomas Harvie, Feb. 17, 1598. 

Thomas Havaye and Joan Codes, June 22, 1612. 

Thomasine Harvey the younger and Anthony Poole, Parish of 
Whitelackington, June 22, 1618. 

Bridget Harvey and William Hodges, Jan. 1, 1623. 

Elizabeth Harvey and Francis Carter, Parish of Broadway, June 
26, 1656. 

Burials. 

James Harvey, Dec. 15, 1597. 

Thomasine, dau. of Thomas Harvey, March 12, 1601. 

William, son of Richard Harvey, Oct. 5, 1601. 

Matthew, son of Thomas Harvey, July 12, 1603. 

Agnes, dau. of Thomas Harvey, March 13, 1605. 

Alice, dau. of Thomas Harvey, July 11, 1609. 

Agnes, wife of Thomas Harvey, Sept. 24, 1610 (?). 

Thomas Harvey, Aug. 2, 1624. 

Richard, son of Joan Harvey, widow, Jan. 8, 1624-5. 

William Harvey, March 31, 1625. 

Elizabeth Harvey, Feb. 19, 1657. 



There were other Harveys in New England who were per- 
haps connected with our branch. 

Joan Harvey, who died March 31, 1705, married about 1641 
Robert Barnard of Salisbury, 1642-1644, of Andover 164 5 
1663, and subsequently of Nantucket, where he died in 1682. 

Thomas 4Iarvey married 1643, Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas 
Wall of Hampton, N. H., and living Aug. 20, 1663, when he 
sold land at Hampton, and perhaps in 1683. 

William Harvey of Taunton was perhaps related. 



6 



Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 



I am indebted to Hoyt's work entitled " The Old Families 
of Salisbury and Amesbury," for much valuable information ; 
also to the " History of Sutton, N. H.," by Mrs. Augusta Har- 
vey Worthen. I have also visited three ancient cemeteries in 
Amesbury and Merrimac, and found only one Harvey grave- 
stone, that of Joseph 4 Harvey, who died Jan. 18, 1761. 

Prior to 1752 the new year began on the 25th of March. 
After the last day of Dec, 1751, the neAV year began Jan. 1, in 
1752. 





FIRST GENERATION. 



1 WILLIAM 1 HARVEY, born , in England; died 

Aug. 15, 1658, in Boston; married , Martha Copp, 

daughter of William and Judith Copp, of Boston. He was 
admitted to the First Church, July 4, 1640 (" 4. 5. 1640 "), 
and his wife Judith, Jan. 24, 1640-1 (" 24. 11. 1640 "). She 
married (2), Nov. 10, 1659, in Boston, by Gov. John Endicott, 
Henry Tewxbery, or Tuxbury, weaver. Some have thought 
that William Harvey of Boston, and William Harvey of Taun- 
ton, were the same person, but there is no proof of tins, and the 
Public Records show the contrary. He is also said to have 
married Martha Slocum, which must have been a second mar- 
riage, but there is no evidence of this, and the Will of William 
Copp, cordwainer, shows that his daughter Martha was the 
mother of William Harvey's children. His Will, dated Oct. 31, 
1662, probated March 15, 1669-70, mentions the widow, now 
married again, and her four Harvey children : 

Daughter Tewxbery to live in the house where son David lives, 
on her death to grand child William Harvey, he to give his brothers 
Thomas and John Harvey ten pounds apiece, and Maiy Harvey five 
pounds. 10 acres ground beyond Braintree to grandchild William 
Harvey. (N. E. Hist. Geneal. Reg., xlviii: p. 459.) 

7 



8 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

The " ground beyond Braintree " was granted William Copp 
at a Town* Meeting in Boston, March 8, 1657-8 : " Itt is or- 
dered that Goodman Copp shall have some land given him 
att Braintree, according to the discretions of the select men." 
(Boston Records, ii, Pt. 1 : p. 144.) 

William Harvey's Will was probated in Boston, and widow 
Martha was appointed administratrix. The Inventory was 
made Jan. 18, 1658-9 ("18. 11. 1658"). There was a house, 
garden and pigs. The widow was to have care of the four 
young children. (Suffolk Probate Docket 207, and Vol. iii : p. 
144.) 

Henry Tewksbury, Tewxbery, or Tuxbury, was of Newbury 
in 1662 ; he took the Oath of Allegiance in that town May 25, 
1669; he sold his place the same year and removed to Ames- 
bury, where he took the Oath of Allegiance Dec. 20, 1677 ; was 
si member of the Train-band in 1680, and signed the Norfolk 
County Petition the same year ; was a Freeman in 1690 ; a 
Tythingman in 1693, the first time they were chosen, and was 
living in 1697. A Martha Tuxbury died Jan. 12, 1729-30, 
and may have been his wife. 

Many removed from the old town of Salisbury and made 
a new settlement, which was commonly called the new town, 
or New Salisbury, March 14, 1654-5 (" 14. 1. 1654 "). A 
covenant was drawn up between the old and new town, and 
the inhabitants of the latter were taxed for certain purposes in 
the old town till 1667-8, when it was incorporated under the 
name of Amesbury, sometimes spelled Eamsbury and Almes- 
hii iy. The first Meeting-house was erected in 1665. No trace 
of it now remains, but a big stone with a bronze inscription, in 
the old cemetery, marks the place. The West Parish of Ames- 
bury, where the Second Church was organized May 19, 1726, 
and where most of the Harveys resided, is now the town of 
Merrimac, incorporated in 1876. 



First Generation. 9 

The children of Henry and Martha (Gopp) Harvey Tuxbury, 
born in Newbury and Amesbury, were : 

1. Hannah Tuxbury, b. Aug. 31, or Sept. 1, 1662 ; in. Oct. 

20, 1687, James Sanders, in Haverhill. 

2. Henry Tuxbury, b. Dec. 15, 1064. 

3. jSTaomy Tuxbury, b. Jan. 18, 1000-7. 

4. Kuth Tuxbury, b. March 10, 1008-9. 

5. Mary Tuxbury, b. Jan. 23, 1070-71 ; bapt. June 18, 1071 , 

in the First Church, Boston, as the dau. of sister Tewks- 

bery. 
0. Martha Tuxbury, b. March 3, 1072-3. 
7. John Tuxbury, b. July 27, 1074. 

The children of William 1 and Martha (Copp) Harvey, born in 
Boston, were : 

2 William, 2 b. Aug. 27, 1651; alive 1662. 

3 Thomas, 2 b. Aug. 16, 1652; d. about 1716, in Amesbury; m. 

Oct. 26, 1676, Sarah Rowell, who was living in 1716, He 
took the Oath of Allegiance, Dec. 20, 1677 ; was a member 
of the Train-band 1680 ; Freeman 1690 ; one of the Com- 
mittee on Highways 1689 ; Representative, or Deputy, 1690, 
1694, 1697, 1699, 1706, 1708, 1713, 1714; Selectman 1701, 
1714, but probably resigned, as in Oct. of that year John 
Foot was chosen to fill out the remainder of the term ; in 
1708, was Capt. of the Snow- Shoe Men, and was engaged 
in scouting in the woods in 1708. In 1710, he petitioned 
for liberty to build vessels at " Jamaco," as the west part of 
the town was called. The Harveys owned a large tract of 
land near where stands the Universalist Church, and where 
probably they lived, and a mill on Cobblers' brook. lie was 
a prominent man and was called Captain Harvey. Son 
William was appointed administrator, March 19, 1716-17. 
The Inventory, Jan. 21, 1715-16, mentions a rapier and 
arms, valued at 50s., a negro, three farms of 22, 35, and 20 
acres, all mortgaged to the Province. The value of the 
estate was small. (Essex Probate, cccxi : 360; cccxii : 19- 
20.) 



10 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

Children, born in Amesbury : 

i. Mary, 3 b. ; d. ; m. May 15, 1707, Joseph Bus- 
well ; she was a widow in 1721. 

ii. Elizabeth, 3 b. ; d. ; m. Dec. 8, 1710, Theophilus 

Colby, b. Nov. 22, 1689 ; d. probably 1724, and son of 
Thomas Colby and Mary Eowell, his wife. 

iii. Hannah, 3 b. ; d. - - ; m. March 8, 1721-2, William 

Currier, son of Thomas Currier and Mary Osgood, his 
wife. A William Currier m. Dec. 14, 1704, Kachel Sar- 
gent, who d. April 19, 1720. Was Hannah Harvey his 
second wife ? A Joannah, wife of William Currier, d. 
July 7, 1729. Was Joannah an error for Hannah ? His 
Will is dated Oct. 30, 174G. 
iv. William, 3 b. March 9, 1687-8 ; d. Jan. 8, 1689-90. 

v. William, 3 b. Jan. 15, 1689-90 ; d. ; m. Oct. 14, 1714, 

Abigail Martin, b. March 13, 1686-7, and dau. of John 
Martin and Mary Weed, his wife. He was one of the 
Snow-Shoe Men in 1708, of whom his father Thomas 
Harvey was Captain. Was taxed in 1726 to support the 
preaching in the Second Church, and both owned the 
Covenant, Aug. 28, 1726. They were both dismissed to 
the Fourth Church, Newbury, Feb. 10, 1750. 

Children, born in Amesbury : 

1. Enoch,* b. ; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726 ; d. . 

2. Thomas,* h. April 3, 1716; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726; d. 



3. Ann,* b. ; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726 ; d. . 

4. William,* b. ; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726; d. ; 

m. Jan. 16, 1745-6, Judith Pillsbury. Was a 
soldier in the French and Indian war, 1754-1756. 
Was of Newbury. 

Children, born in Amesbury : 

i. Thomas, 5 b. Nov. 30, 1746; bapt. Dec. 7, 1746. 
ii. William, 5 b. ; bapt. April 2, 1749. 

5. Sarah, 4 b. ; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726 ; d. ; m. 

Jan. 4, 1737-8, Ezra Blaisdell, cordwainer, b. 
Aug. 19, 1713, d. Dec. 22, 1798. Had 11 children. 



First Generation. 



11 



6. Jo/m, 4 b. 



; bapt. Oct. 9,1726; d. 



7. Theophilus^h.- 

8. Fortunatvsfb. 



; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726 ; d. — 
-; bapt. Aug. 25,1728 ; d. 



vi. Thomas, 3 b. Feb. 14, 1691-2 ; d. young. 

4 JOHN, 2 b. Feb. 5, 1654-5; bapt. Feb. 11, 1654-5; <1. March 

8, 1705-6; m. about 1685, Sarah (Barnes) Rowell. 

5 Mary, 2 b. --, 1657; bapt. Aug. 2, 1657 ("2. 6. 1657"); d. 

(alive 1662). 





SECOND GENERATION. 



4 JOHN 2 HARVEY (William 1 '), born Feb. 5, 1654-5, in 
Boston; baptized Feb. 11, 1654-5 ("11. 12. 1654"), "son of 
sister Harvey"; died March 8, 1705-6, in Amesbury ; married 
about 1685-6, Sarah (Barnes) Rowell, born about 1650, 
died April 17, 1720, in Arnesbury, daughter of William and 
Rachel Barnes, his wife, and widow of Thomas Rowell, who 
died in 1684. William Barnes died March 14, 1697-8, and his 
wife Rachel, Feb. 9, 1685-6, both in Amesbury. He was a 
weaver and a carpenter. He was first of Newbury and Salis- 
buiy, but removed to Amesbury and took the Oath of Alle- 
giance there Dec. 20, 1677. He was impressed as a soldier 
and wounded at the Narragansett fight, Dec. 19, 1675, and a 
member of the Train-band, 1680 ; he was dismissed from Salis- 
bury to the Amesbury church, Feb. 8, 1699-1700. Adminis- 
tration on his estate, Sept. 26, 1706. Inventory, April 9, 1706. 
He had land on the County road and an orchard valued at £65 ; 
meadow in Amesbury, <£6 ; meadow in Salisbury, £8 ; lot of 
land at " Buggemore," South Hampton, N. H., 30 acres, £5. 
Total Inventory, £122: 8 : 0. (Essex Probate, cccix : 94-95.) 

Children, born in Amesbury : 

(i Dorathy, 8 b. ; d. ; m. Feb. 13, 1705-6, Orlando 

Bagley, b. Dec. 14, 1682, d. May 3, 1756. 

12 



Second Generation. 



13 



7 Judith, 3 b. May 2, 1688; d. (living 1721); m. Dec. 7, 

1710, Jacob Sargent, b. Marcb 13, 1687-8, living 1721, son 
of William Sargent and Mary Colby, bis wife. Tbey bad 
5 children. 

8 JOHN, 8 b. Dec. 3, 1690 ; d. May 10, 1740 ; m. Nov. 80, 1714, 

Anna Davis. 

9 JOSEPH, 3 b. April 1, 1693; d. Jan.-Marcb, 1756-7; m. Dec. 

8, 1715, Doratby Barnard. 




THIRD GENERATION. 



8 JOHN 3 HARVEY (John,* William 1 ), born Dec. 3, 1690, 
in Amesbury; died May 10, 1740, in Amesbury; married Nov. 
80, 1714, Anna Davis, who survived her husband. She was 
admitted to the Second Church in Amesbury, May 19, 1726, 
coming from the First Parish. He resided in Amesbury and 
owned land in Salisbury. Widow Anna was appointed ad- 
ministratrix, July 14, 1740. The Inventory, June 26, 1740, 
amounted to £1466 : 19 : 6, and is signed with her mark. The 
division of the estate was made March 31, 1747. Mention is 
made of widow Ann, who had lands in Salisbury and " Bug- 
more " ; Joseph, oldest son ; Jonathan, second son ; Jacob, 
youngest son ; Sarah, oldest daughter ; Dorathy, youngest 
daughter. (Essex Probate, cccxxiv : 422 ; cccxxv : 103 ; 
cccxxvii: 348-352.) 

Children, born in Amesbury : 

10 Sarah, 4 b. ; d. (alive 1747); m. Jan. 4, 1737-8, 

Ezra Blaisdell, b. Aug. 19, 1713, d. Dec. 22, 1798, and son 
of John Blaisdell and Ebenezar (?) Stevens, his wife. 

11 Judith, 4 b. Nov. 15, 1719; d. (not mentioned in the dis- 

tribution, 1747). 

12 Dorathy, 4 b. — , 1721; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726; d. (alive 

1747); in. Oct. 19, 1742, Henry Lancaster. Resided 1770, 
in New Salem. 

14 



Third Generation. 1 5 

13 Jacob, 4 b. Jan. 9, 1722-3; d. young. 

14 Joseph, 4 b. March 22, 1723-4; d. Jan. 18, 1761, 37th year, 

(g. s.) ; m. Jan. 4, 1749-50, Sarah Sargent, b. March 14, 1726, 
dau. of Timothy Sargent and Mary Williams of Newbury, 
his wife ; she renewed her baptismal covenant at the Second 
Church in 1750. In 1755 he was at Crown Point in the 
Company of Capt. Stephen Sargent. Widow Sarah was 
appointed administratrix, Feb. 23, 1761. The Inventory, 
signed by her mark, mentions books, fire-arms and bayonet, 
£1: 12: 0; 18 acres land and dwelling, £120; one-third 
pew, West Meeting-house, £1 : 6 : 8. Total real estate, 
£160; personal, £49: 5: 2. Account rendered June 24, 
1762 (Essex Probate, cccxxxvii : 523; cccxxxix: 196-197); 
there were two young children mentioned. 

Children, born in Amesbury : 

i. Sargeant, 5 b. Jan. 29, 1750-1 ; bapt. Feb. 3, 1751 ; d. Dec. 
15, 1791, aet. 41. He was a private in Capt. Matthew 
Hoyt's Company of Minute Men, April 19, 1775 ; in 
Capt. Oliver Titcomb's Company, Col. Jacob Gerrish's 
Reg't, Feb. 3, 1778-April 2, 1778 ; enlisted July 6, 1780, 
in the Company of Capt. Richard Titcomb, Col. Nathan- 
iel Wales' Reg't, and discharged Oct. 10, 1780. 

ii. Dolly, 5 b. Sept. 28, 1753 ; d. . 

iii. Anna, 5 b. Aug. 15, 1754 ; bapt. Feb. 3, 1754-5 ; d. . 

iv. John, 5 b. Feb. 15, 175U ; bapt. ; d. July 10, 1798, aet. 

42, in Amesbury. He enlisted 1775, in Capt. John Cur- 
rier's Company, Col. James Frye's Reg't. Served also 
in 1780. 
v. Mary, 5 b. May 29, 1751) ; bapt. Nov. 25, 1759 ; d. . 

15 Jonathan, 4 b. May 29, 1725; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726; d. — , 1764, 

in Nottingham, N. II.; m. Oct. 2, 1744, in Amesbury, Su- 
sanna George, of South Hampton, N. H., who d. April — , 
1817, aet. 90, leaving 260 descendants. He was a soldier 
in the French and Indian war, and was at Ticonderoga, 
N. Y. He and wife renewed their baptismal covenant at 
the Second Church in 1744; removed, with his family, to 



16 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

Nottingham about 1755; he was a cousin to the father of 
Col. John Harvey of Northwood, and the grandfather of 
Judge Matthew Harvey of Suttdn, N. II. Children,-- live 
of them are on the Amesbury Records, and the others were 
probably born in Nottingham: 

i. Levi, 5 b. July 1, 1745 ; bapt. July 7, 1745 ; d. ; m. 

, Betsey Randlett, and had 10 children. 

ii. Miriam, 5 b. April 23, 1747 ; bapt. April 26, 1747 ; d. ; 

m. , Benjamin Critchett of Nottingham. Settled 

in Falmouth, now Deering, Me. 

iii. Matthew, 5 b. Feb. 18, 1748-9 ; bapt. Feb. 26, 174S-9 ; d. 
Feb. 25, 1799, in Sutton, N. IT. ; m. — , 1779. Hannah 
Sargent, b. Jan. 18, 1761, d. Nov. 8, 1827, and dau. of 
Philip Sargent of Weare, N. H. Matthew was a mem- 
ber of the N. H. Senate. His son, Judge Matthew 6 Har- 
vey, was b. June 21, 1781 ; d. April 7, 1866. He grad- 
uated at Dartmouth, 1806. 

iv. Gertrude, 5 b. Nov. 24, 1751 ; bapt. Dec. 8, 1751 ; d. ; 

m. , Nathan Philbrick of Deerfield, N. H. 

v. Judith, 5 b. May 30, 1754 ; bapt. June 2, 1754; d. . 

vi. Joseph, 5 b. ; d. ; m. . Removed to Sutton 

about 1790, and soon after to Western New York with 
his family. 

vii. Jonathan, 5 b. ; d. April, 1845,' in Nottingham ; rri. 

, Susan Hedlock of South Hampton, N. H. They 

had 19 children. 

viii. Susan, 5 b. ; d. ; m. , Thomas Robinson of 

Deerfield, N. H. 

ix. Dolly, 5 b. — ; d. about 1834, in Nottingham ; unm. 

x. James, 5 b. March 4, or June 5, 1765 ; d. ; m. Sept. 

21, 178G, Eunice Cotter, b. June 5, 1755, d. 1840. He 
removed to Sutton about 1790. He enlisted in the War 
of 1812, and d. in Wilmot, N. H., and was buried there, 
on the march from Concord, N. H., to Burlington, Vt. 

16 John, 4 b. ; bapt. Oct. 9, 1726; d. young. 

17 Anna, 4 b. March 23, 1727-8; bapt. April 7, 1728; d. 

(not mentioned 1747). 

18 Jacoij, 4 b. March 7, 1729-30; bapt. March 8, 1729-30; d. 

young. 



Third Generation. 17 

19 Jacob, 4 b. Jan. 9, 1732-3; bapt. March 18, 1732-3; d. about 
1773, in Amesbury; m. July 9, 1761, Hannah Hunt, b. Jan. 
3, 1732-3, and dau. of Nathaniel Hunt. She m. (2), March 
5, 1783, David Ring. In 1755 he was at Crown Point, in 
the Company of Capt. Stephen Sargent. Administration 
was granted to widow Hannah, Dec. 27, 1773. Inventory, 
Sept. 22, 1773. It includes a saw-mill, part of a grist-mill 
and two-thirds pew in the Meeting-house. The other one- 
third was probably owned by his brother Joseph, as men- 
tioned above. Total Inventory, £637 : 19 : 6. April 4, 
1787, Amasa Sargent was appointed guardian for Hannah, 
minor, aet. 20, John, minor, aet. 17, Joseph, minor, about 7, — 
this is an evident error, for Joseph must have been older 
than 7, as his father died in 1773 — children of Jacob Har- 
vey, yeoman, late of Amesbury, deceased. April 13, 1787, 
widow Hannah, now Ring, claims support for Joseph and 
John. (Essex Probate, cccxlviii : 253, 258 ; ccclix : 9.) He 
renewed his baptismal covenant at the Second Church in 
1762. Children, born in Amesbury: 

i. Dolly, 5 b. June 9, 1762 ; bapt. Sept. 5, 1762 ; d. Nov. 10, 
1765. 

ii. Hannah, 5 b. Sept. 23, 1763 ; d. . 

iii. Jacob, 5 b. Dec. 29, 1764 ; bapt. Feb. 24, 1765 ; d. ; 

m. (1), Dec. 1, 1790, Sarah Welch, d. Sept. 12, 1792, 
aet. 28 (g. s.), dau. of Joseph Welch ; m. (2), Oct. 20, 
1793, Rhoda Sargent, b. Feb. 4, 1774, dau. of Christo- 
pher Sargent and Anna Sargent, his wife. His widow 

m. (2), , Samuel Rogers, and removed to Ohio. 

He removed to Sutton, N. II. 

Child, born in Amesbury, by his first marriage : 

1. Dolly* b. May 21, 1791. 
By his second marriage : 

2. Moses Sargent* b. June 8, 1794 ; d. March 24, 1870, 

in Painesville, Ohio ; m. about 1817, Martha Wad- 
leigh, d. May 1, 1870, in Concord, Ohio. He was 
Judge of Probate. They had 4 children. 



18 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

3. Sally, 6 b. Oct. 17, 1790; d. -; m. about 1816, 

Enoch Colby, and removed to Ohio. 

4. Jacob* b. Jan. 28, 1799. 

5. Joseph, 6 b. Oct. 19, 1802. 

iv. Hannah, b. July 4, 1760 ; d. ; m. Feb. 18, 1804, 

James Eaton of Sandown, N. H. 
v. John, 6 b. Feb. 27, 17G9 ; bapt. July 23, 1709 ; d. ; 

m. (1), Oct., 1793, Hannah Kezar ; m. (2), Oct. 15, 

1790, Hannah Hoyt. 
vi. Joseph, 5 b. April 21, 1773 ; bapt. June 13, 1773 ; d. ; 

m. March 10, 1810, Polly Sargent, dau. of Christopher 

and Anna Sargent, his wife. 

20 John, 4 b. March 17, 1733-4; d. (not mentioned 1747). 





ii^S) 



THIRD GENERATION. 



9 JOSEPH 3 HARVEY (John* William 1 ), born April 1, 
1693, in Amesbury; died Jan.-March, 1756-7, in Amesbury ; 
married Dec. 8, 1715, Dorathy Barnard, born Nov. 28, 1697, 
baptized Nov. 19, 1727, d. , and daughter of Joseph Bar- 
nard and Mary Jewell, his wife. Think she married (2), July 
5, 1758, Benjamin Tucker. He owned land in Amesbury and 
in "Bugmore," South Hampton. Prior to 1741 the present 
northern boundary of South Hampton, N. H., was wholly a 
part of Amesbury and Salisbury. The boundary line between 
New Hampshire and Massachusetts has been altered. In 1726 
he was taxed to support preaching in the Second Church, and 
renewed his baptismal covenant there about that time. His 
Will, in which he is styled "yeoman," was made Jan. 20, 1757, 
and probated April 4, 1757. Son David was executor. It 
mentions wife Dorothy, sons Thomas, David, who was to be 
executor, and Joseph, daughter Mary Currier, grandson John 
and granddaughters Molly and Dolly, children of son John, de- 
ceased, and granddaughter Martha, daughter of son Timothy, 
deceased. He made provision for the children of his deceased 
son John : "I give to my grandson John Harvey one-third 
part of an acre of land on the North side of my Barn, including 

19 



20 Ancestry of Col John Harvey. 

the orchard the said John's son set out. I also give to my said 
son live acres of land in the Pines, so called, in Amesbury 
abovesaid, bounding westerly and easterly on highways, South- 
erly on William Moulton, Northerly on Gideon Davis. Pro- 
vided always that my said grandson pay to each of his sisters, 
namely Mary and Dolly Harvey, £s 3, to be paid them, or their 
heirs, by their brother John Harvey within one year after my 
decease." (Essex Probate, cccxxxiv: 289, 291, 292.) 
Children, born in Amesbury : 

21 Mary, 4 b. Sept. 29, 1716 ; bapt. Sept. 14, 1729 ; <1. (alive 

1757) ; m. Feb. 16, 1736-7, Abner Currier. 

22 JOHN, 4 b. March 29, 1719; bapt. Sept. 14, 1729; d. Aug. 18, 

1756; m. June 9, 1743, Mary Whittle. 

23 Timothy, 4 b. Aug. 5, 1721 ; bapt. Sept. 14, 1729 ; d. (be- 

fore June 3, 1756); m. (1), March 12, 1744-5, Martha 
Kelly, b. Oct. 9, 1722, and dau. of Jonathan Kelly and Mar- 
tha Morse, his wife ; m. (2), May 3, 1753, Gertrude Sargent, 
who m. (2), March 29, 1759, Enoch Chase, jr. She is 
called " Cartret," in the Records. He and his first wife re- 
newed their baptismal covenant in 1744, and his second wife 
in 1755, at the Second Church. Feb. 26, 1759, widow 
"Cartret" was appointed guardian of her dau. Martha, minor, 
under 14. Inventory dated June 3, 1756; administration 
to widow "Cartaret," June 14, 1756. (Essex Probate, 
cccxxxiv : 23 ; cccxxxvi: 78.) 

Children, born in Amesbury, by his first marriage : 

i. Ruth, 5 b. Dec. 8, 1745 ; bapt. Dec. 8, 1745 ; d. . 

ii. Martha, 5 b. July 17, 1747; bapt. Aug. 16, 1747; d. young, 
iii. Timothy, 5 b. Sept. 15, 1749 ; bapt. Sept. 17, 1741). 
iv. Ensign, 5 b. ; bapt. Aug. 10, 1752. 

By his second marriage : 

v. Anna, 5 b. ; bapt. April 27, 1755 ; dead probably in 

175<). 



Third Generation. 21 

vi. Abigail, 5 b. ; bapt. April 27, 1755 ; dead probably in 

1759. 
vii. Martha, 5 b. Dec. 7, 1754, or Feb. 21, 1754-5 ; bapt. April 
27, 1755 ; d. (alive 1759). 

24 Valentine, 4 b. Nov. 19, 1723 ; bapt. Sept. 14, 1729; d. young. 

25 David, 4 b. April 24, 1726; bapt. Sept. 14, 1729; d. July 27, 

1815; m. Feb. 19, 1746-7, Judith Chase, b. Oct. 24, 1727, 
d. Oct. 18, 1808. Was a soldier in 1757, and executor of 
his father's Will in 1757. Removed to Warner, N. II., and 
settled on a fine farm on Tory Hill. 

Children, born in Amesbury : 

i. Sarah, 5 b. Aug. 23, 1747; bapt. Nov. 1, 1747; d. Oct. 30, 

1826 ; m. March 3, 1768, Benjamin Sargent, jr., b. Aug. 

4, 1743, d. Sept. 8, 1816, and son of Benjamin Sargent 

and Ruth Moulton, his wife, 
ii. Isaiah, 5 b. Dec. 21, 1748 ; bapt. Dec. 25, 1748 ; d. ; 

m. Oct. 28, 1773, Mary Sargent, b. Feb. 22, 1749. 

hi. David, 5 b. Jan. 25, 1750-51; bapt. Jan. 27, 1751; d. . 

iv. Dolly, 5 b. Sept. 28, 1753 ; d. young, 
v. Judith, 5 b. Sept. 28, 1755 ; d. Oct. 24, 1831; m. Aug. 12, 

1773, Joseph Sargent, b. Aug. 20, 1751, d. Jan. 5, 1845, 

at Warner. 

vi. Timothy, 5 b. Nov. 24, 1757; bapt. Nov. 27, 1757; d. . 

vii. Humphrey, 5 b. June 9, 1760; bapt. June 15, 1760; d. . 

viii. Enoly (?) (dau.), b. Aug. 17, 1762 ; d. . 

ix. Abner, 5 b. Aug. 12, 1764 ; bapt. Aug. 14, 1764 ; d. . 

x. Dorothy, 5 b. ; bapt. Sept. 21, 1766 ; d. ; m. April 

27, 1780, John Challis, in Amesbury. Removed to 

Sutton, N. H. 
xi. Molly, 5 b. Feb. 16, 1767; bapt. March 1, 1767; d. ; 

m. Nov. 23, 1793, Seth Russell of Sutton. 

xii. Martha, 5 b. April 24, 1769 ; bapt. May 28, 1769 ; d. . 

xiii. Miriam, 5 b. June 21, 1771; bapt. June 30, 1771; d. March 

26, 1854 ; m. , William Quimby. 

26 Isaiah, 4 b. Jan. 29, 1728-29; bapt. Sept. 14, 1729; d. 



(dead before April 22, 1748, when his father was appointed 
administrator of his estate). (Essex Probate, cccxxviii : 
131.) 



22 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

27 Joseph, 4 b. Sept. 11, 1731; bapt. June 11, 1732; d. 

(mentioned in his father's Will, 1757). Joseph Harvey, jr., 
was one of a draft of 24 men from the 2d Foot Co., Aug. 
15, 1757, for the Indian War at the Lakes. 

28 Valentine, 4 b. ; bapt. Oct. 3, 1736; d. (not men- 

tioned in 1757). 

29 Thomas, 4 b. Nov. 22, 1738; bapt. June 1, 1740; d. ; m. 

Feb. 19, 17G5, Elizabeth Colby, dau. of Isaac Colby and 
Sarah Davis, his wife, of Haverhill. In Newton, N. H., 
in 1766. William Moulton was appointed, April 4, 1757, 
guardian of Thomas Harvey, minor, above 14, son of Joseph 
Harvey, late of Amesbury, deceased. (Essex Probate, 
cccxxxiv : 292.) 




FOURTH GENERATION. 



22 JOHN 4 HARVEY (Joseph? John? William^, born 
March 29, 1719, in Amesbmy ; baptized Sept. 14, 1729; died 
Aug. 18, 1756, at Fort William Henry, Lake George, N. Y. ; 
married June 9, 1743, Mary Whittle, born June 22, 1722, 

died Nov. (her son, Col. John Harvey, in his Diary, 

1779-1781, gives the date thus), and probably the daughter of 
Thomas and Mary Whittle, who had a son Thomas, baptized 
Aug. 7, 1726, in the Second Church. He was a carpenter by 
trade ; was enrolled in the Train-band of Capt. Sargent, Col. 
John Greenleaf's Regiment. Carpenters and shipwrights were 
wanted to build boats and vessels on Lake Champlain and Lake 
George. In 1756, drafts were made upon every Company in 
the Province for soldiers. These were picked men, and their 
services, in addition to doing strictly military duties, were em- 
ployed in constructing vessels to combat the French on the 
lakes. They were shipwrights and carpenters. They were 
constantly so employed in 1755, 1756 and 1757. This work 
went on, summer and winter, and more progress was made in 
the latter season, because there was less danger of attack then 
from the French and their Indian allies. Those vessels that 
survived the French and Indian wars did valiant service in our 
Revolutionary struggle. 

23 



24 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

John Harvey was drafted and enrolled in the Company of 
Capt. Stephen Webster, Col. Bayley's Regiment, according to 
a Descriptive List, dated at Fort William Henry, Aug. 9, 1756, 
being then 37 years old. He died soon after. According to 
the Massachusetts Archives (xciv : 118), " John Harvey served 
for 43 days, 2 s - per day, <£4 : 6 : 0." This report was made up 
Feb. 3, 1757, at Crown Point (see Massachusetts Archives, 
xcv: 154), where John Harvey was reported "dead," and that 
he served till Aug. 22, 1756, " 20 wks, and 6 days, £8. 6. 11." 
Amesbury town records say he died Aug. 18, 1756. The name 
of Theophilus Harvey, aet. 27, of Kingston, and born there, 
occurs next to that of John Harvey. He may be the Theophi- 
lus, son of William Harvey, baptized in 1726 (see page 11). 
Ages in muster rolls are often incorrect. 

Widow Mary Harvey was appointed administratrix, Oct. 14, 
1756. The inventory, Oct. 9, 1756, shows very little property. 
They both renewed their baptismal covenant at the Second 
Church in 1744. 

Children, born in Amesbury : 

80 Mary, 5 b. May 26, 1744; bapt. May 26, 1744 ; d. young. 

31 JOHN, 5 b. Aug. 4, 1745; bapt. Aug. 11, 1745; d. Feb.—, 

1812; m. about 1771, Sarah Blake. 

32 Molly, 5 b. Nov. 27, 1747; bapt. May (Nov.?) 29, 1747; d. 

(alive 1757). 

33 Dolly, 5 b. May 25, 1750; d. (alive 1757). 




FIFTH GENERATION. 



31 Col. JOHN"' HARVEY (John* Joseph, 3 John, 2 Wil- 
liam 1 ), born Aug. 4, 1745, in Aniesbury; baptized Aug. 11, 
1745 ; died Feb. — , 1812, according to Parson Bradley's Diary, 
in Falmouth, now Westbrook, Maine; married about 1771, 
Sarah Blake, of Epping, N. H., born Dec. 5, 1747; died 
Nov. 14, 1827, aet. 79 years, 11 months (g. s.), in Northwood, 
N. H., and daughter of Joseph Blake. He probably came to 
Nottingham about 1765, where Jonathan Harvey settled about 
1755 (see pages 15, 16), and afterwards removed to that part 
of the town which was set off Feb. 6, 1773, as Northwood. 
April 1, 1772, he bought land of Samuel Dearborn, cordwainer, 
of Epping, bounded west by a pond, afterwards called Harvey 
Pond, now Harvey Lake, for £32: 10s., where he lived. The 
first meeting of the freeholders and inhabitants was called 
March 23, 1773, when he was chosen one of the fence-viewers. 
June 9, 1774, he, with others, petitioned for Benjamin Hill to 
be Justice of the Peace. 

When he first enlisted as a soldier in the Revolution is not 
now known, but in the pay-roll, Aug. 1, 1775, of the Company 
of Capt. Henry Dearborn, of Nottingham, Col. John Stark's 
Regiment, which was at the battle of Bunker Hill and in sub- 
sequent campaigns, occurs the name of a John Harvey, who 
enlisted May 11, 1775, served 2 months, 26 days, and Oct. 16 



25 



26 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

he received |4.00 for his regimental coat, promised by the Colony 
of New Hampshire. In the fall of 1775, Dearborn's Company 
was in Arnold's Regiment, which marched to Quebec by way of 
the Kennebec. In April, 1776, the Association Test was drawn 
up in the town of Northwood, and a return made of all those 
who signed and of those who refused to sign. The name of 
John Harvey does not occur in either of these lists. He was 
probably in the Army. When he became a member of the 
New Hampshire Society of the Cincinnati in 1784, he signed as 
a Lieutenant, having served four years, to the end of the war. 
But he was a soldier for a longer period. According to the 
New Hampshire Muster Rolls (imperfect), he enlisted Feb. 22, 

1777, for three years, as Sergeant, in the 1st Company, Capt. 
James Gray, 3d New Hampshire Regiment; was Ensign, May 1, 

1778, to Jan., 1780, and promoted to be Quarter-master, Sept. 
15, 1780, from Ensign. In the new arrangement of officers in 
the 1st Regiment, Col. Joseph Cilley, he was Ensign, and pro- 
moted to be Lieutenant, May 12, 1781. 

In 1779, and later, he served in Pennsylvania and along the 
Hudson River. His Regiment formed a part of Sullivan's ex- 
pedition against the Six Nations of Indians of Western New 
York. He was present at the execution of Maj. John Andre, 
Oct. 2, 1780, at Tappan, N. Y. He kept a Diary during this 
campaign, from 1779-1781. It is a small book, in excellent 
preservation, of some 130 pages, and about 120 words to a 
page. The writing is plain, and the language used is good, 
though the spelling, of course, is not always correct. He 
records that he left Northwood March 7, 1779, and marched 15 
miles to Epping. It has two well-drawn plans of battles. At 
the end he gives the record of his own family, the date of the 
birth and death of his father, and the date of birth of his 
mother, without giving her maiden name, and the month only 
of her death. This Diary he gave to Joseph Quinby, Jr., son 
of widow Quinby, at whose house he was then living, Jan., 



Fifth Generation. 27 

1812, not long before his death in the following February, as 
Joseph has marked on a fly-leaf. This Diary is now in the 
possession of Miss Lillian Quinby, granddaughter of Joseph 
Quinby, Jr., and Librarian of the Westbrook Public Library. 
In 1904 I called at her residence to see the book. She was 
very courteous, and allowed me to examine as much as I pleased 
the Diary, which she values very highly, but would not part 
with it on any consideration, and, unfortunately, would not 
allow it to be printed ; so that the descendants of Col. John 
Harvey may probably never be able to see the work of their 
ancestor. But, fortunately, in the " Journals of the Military 
Expedition of Maj. John Sullivan against the Six Nations of 
Indians in 1779," there have been printed by Frederick Cook 
(Auburn, N. Y., 1887), five Diaries written by New Hampshire 
officers, from which may be gathered the same information as 
that contained in Lieut. Harvey's Diary : — Lieut. Col. Henry 
Dearborn, 3d N. H. Regiment, with plan of order of march and 
battle, the same as in Harvey's Diary, pp. 62-79; Sergeant 
Moses Fellows, 3d N. H. Regiment, pp. 86-91 ; Maj. James 
Norris, 3d N. H. Regiment, pp. 223-239 ; Maj. Jeremiah Fogg, 
2d N. H. Regiment, pp. 92-101; Ensign Daniel Gookin, 2d 
N. H. Regiment, pp. 102-106. 

After the close of the war in 1783, he returned to North- 
wood, where he was a prosperous farmer, and interested in the 
welfare of the town. In 1783 he bought various lots of land 
sold for taxes, 1779-1782, and in the Deeds he is styled "gen- 
tleman" (Rockingham Deeds, cxiv: 496-501 ; cxxxii: 195, 199). 
He had the title of Colonel at least as early as 1788, probably 
from service in the militia. In 1781 the Congregationalists 
built a Meeting-house. June 3, 1784, the pew privileges were 
sold, varying from 112.00 to #19.50. A first, second and third 
was sold to John Harvey, and he was one of the committee 
men to sell them. His wife Sarah became a member when the 
church was organized, Nov. 29, 1788, but he did not. He was 



28 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

Town Clerk, 1784-1788, and a selectman in 1787. He signed 
a petition for laying out a road, Dec. 15, 1788. 

THE NEW HAMPSHIRE SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 

At the close of the War of the Revolution, the officers of 
the Continental Army, at Newburgh-on-the-Hudson, May 13, 
1783, formed a Society to be called the Cincinnati, to perpet- 
uate the memory of the struggle, and to promote mutual 
friendships and acts of beneficence among its members and 
their posterity. For convenience the Society was divided into 
thirteen State Societies. Gen. Washington was the first Presi- 
dent-General. A Society of the French officers was also organ- 
ized July 4, 1784, under the presidency of Count d'Estaing, 
who was guillotined April 28, 1794, — the first and only Presi- 
dent of the Society in France. It included among its members 
many illustrious nobles and military officers. Louis XVI, by 
decree in council, permitted them to wear the Order. No other 
foreign Order, except that of the Golden Fleece, was allowed 
to be worn in France. The institution was formally sanctioned 
by Louis XVI at Versailles, Dec. 18, 1783, with the head of 
the Government as patron of the Order. It became dormant 
and the members were dispersed by the outbreak of the Revo- 
lution in 1792. (See " The Order of the Cincinnati in France," 
by Asa Bird Gardiner, 1905.) 

The New Hampshire Society of the Cincinnati was organized 
at Exeter, Nov. 18, 1783. The original members were twenty- 
seven, whose names were subscribed on that occasion, and at a 
subsequent meeting, Feb. 4, 1784. Lieut. John Harvey sub- 
scribed in 1784. Owing to a lack of interest in creating 
new members, many of the original ones having died or re- 
moved to other States, the Society became dormant in 1 823, 
and the last meeting was adjourned after voting " that the next 
annual meeting be held at Portsmouth." So it is plain that 
the Society never intended to disband. A few years ago the 



Fifth Generation. 29 

work of resuscitation was begun, and the Society is now in a 
very flourishing condition. It was chiefly owing to the action 
of the New Hampshire Society in 1784, in opposing the pro- 
posed amendment to the Constitution abolishing the rule of 
hereditary succession, that the Order was preserved. Nov. 1, 
1902, the Society purchased the " Gilman House," a fine old 
Colonial building, as a permanent headquarters, and here its 
meetings are held every Fourth of July and on other occasions. 
The house was built by Nathaniel Ladd in 1721, and was the 
residence, during the Revolution, of Col. Nicholas Gilman, 
Treasurer of New Hampshire from 1775 to 1783. 

After serving so long in the war, it is no wonder that many 
of these men had become incapacitated for hard farm labor. 
Large arrearages were also due them from the Government, 
which it was promised should be paid them with interest as 
soon as the state of the finances allowed. Many with broken 
fortunes and health could not wait, and their claims and cer- 
tificates were sold to sharpers for what they could get, often a 
mere fraction of what was due them. 

John Harvey owned many farms, had a good house, and was 
an innholder, but he desired a better dwelling ; so he erected 
the house, afterwards the residence of his son Judge John 
Harvey till 1820, when he built a new house for himself, now 
a hotel, the " Harvey House." It commanded a fine view of 
Harvey pond, or lake, as it is now called, and here his former 
companions in arms were always welcome to a generous hos- 
pitality. His new home was so much superior to most other 
dwellings that it caused general comment. His hospitality 
was such that he went beyond his means, and he became badly 
involved in debt. He began selling his property. In 1790 he 
sold John Blydenburgh, of Durham, 168 acres and buildings, 
being the whole of lot No. 20, and 50 acres of lot 19, south of 
the pond. In 1791 he sold other lots. (Rockingham Deeds, 
cxxvii: 433, 521 ; cxxix : 127.) April 23, 1795, his son bought 



30 



Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 



back lot 21, about 100 acres, for £50, which his father had 
sold March 21, 1791, and also bought of Sherburne Blake for 
•1800 the lands sold John Blydenburgh, Aug. 31, 1790. (Rock- 
ingham Deeds, cxli: 17-19.) He also paid many debts con- 
tracted by his father. Later, Col. Harvey went "down East," 
as Maine was called, to visit some friends, old soldiers. One 
of the daughters of Jonathan Harvey of Nottingham had also 
settled in what is now the town of Deering (see p. 16). He 
went to what is now the town of Westbrook. The town of 
Falmouth was incorporated in 1718, and included the present 
towns of Portland, Falmouth, Cape Elizabeth, Westbrook and 
Deering. Westbrook was set off and incorporated as Stroud- 
water in 1814, and in 1815 the name was changed to West, 
brook. Deering was set off and incorporated in 1871. He 
resided at the house of Azuba Quinby, near Nason's corner, 
widow of Joseph Quinby, a Revolutionary soldier, and here he 
died in February, 1812. It is not known where he was buried. 
In the Massachusetts Records, in a Muster Roll for 1777 at 
the camp near Valley Forge, the name of Joseph Quinby occurs, 
credited to the town of Falmouth, who enlisted Jan. 1, 1777, 
for three years. Till 1820 Maine was a part of Massachusetts. 

It is not known when John Harvey went to Maine ; but the 
Rev. Caleb Bradley, locally known as Parson Bradley (H. U. 
1795), who died in 1861, records in his Diary, June 24, 1799, 
a subscription of $2.00 from John Harvey towards his settle- 
ment as minister. He died here during one of his visits. 

Children, born in Northwood : 

84 Joseph, 6 b. April 28, 1772; d. Nov. 30, 1782, aet. 10 y., 7 m. 

(g- s -) 

35 JOHN, 6 b. April 16, 1774; d. May 2, 1S49; m. (1), March 1, 

1797, Betsey Mead; m. (2), Jan. 10, 1815, Dorothy Frost 
Wentworth. 

36 SARAH, 6 b. May 5, 1785; d. June 11, 1874; m. April 27, 

1806, Dea. Jonathan Piper. 

37 Joseph, 6 b. Oct. 1.3, 1787; d. , 1826, in Boston; unm. 




SIXTH GENERATION. 



35 Judge JOHN 6 HARVEY (John* John * Joseph? John? 

William 1 '), born April 16, 1774, in Northwood, N. H. ; died May 
2, 1849, aet. 75 (g. s.), in Northwood ; married (1), March 1, 
1797, Betsey Mead, born Jan. 28, 1767, died March 9, 1814, 
aet. 47 (g. s.), in Northwood, and daughter of Benjamin Mead, 
of Newmarket, N. H. ; married (2), Jan. 10, 1815, Dorothy 
Frost 6 Wentworth, born June 24, 1779, died Dec. 28, 1849, 
aet. 70 (g. s.), in Northwood, and daughter of Hon. John 5 
Wentworth, of Dover, N. H., a descendant of Elder William 1 
Wentworth, who came to New England from England as early 
as 1639. Mr. Wentworth married in 1771, Margaret 5 Frost, of 
Newcastle, N. H., daughter of Joseph 4 Frost, and granddaughter 
of Capt. John 3 Frost, who married Sept. 4, 1702, Mary 2 Pep- 
perrell, daughter of William 1 Pepperrell, the emigrant, and 
eldest sister of Sir William 2 Pepperrell, the Baronet, who cap- 
tured Louisburg, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, from the French 
in 1745. (See Wentworth Genealogy.) Judge Harvey was a 
man of great ability, of good judgment, and very successful 
as a farmer, a merchant, an innholder, and in everything he 
undertook, acquiring a large property for those times. He was 
a Selectman eighteen times, from 1805 to 1832; Representative 
four years, 1806, 1807, 1808, 1812; member of the State 
Senate, 1817 and 1818; Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, 

31 



32 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

1818-1820 ; Chief Justice of Court Sessions, 1820 ; Judge of 
Probate for Rockingham County from 1826 to 1838, when he re- 
signed from ill-health ; the first President of the Exeter Manu- 
facturing Co., and for many years President of the Granite 
Suite Bank, Exeter, N. H. 

Children, born in Northwood, by his first marriage : 

38 John, 7 b. June 16, 1799; d. Oct. 10, 1834 (g. s.), in North- 
wood; m. , Adaline Batchelder, b. Dec. 13, 1798, d. 

June 9, 1874, in Manchester, N. H. (g. s. Northwood), dau. 
of Capt. Henry Batchelder, of Northwood, and a descendant 
from Rev. Stephen Bachiler, who arrived in Boston June 5, 
1632. She ra. (2), as his second wife, , Dea. John Ben- 
nett, b. July 21, 1786, son of Thomas Bennett and Sarah 
Davis, his wife, of Northwood. They had a dau., Nellie 
Bennett, who married and is now dead. Resided in Man- 
chester. Mr. Harvey was an extensive farmer and lived at 
the old Harvey homestead. He owned a tannery, was en- 
gaged in the ship-timber business, and for many years was 
Sheriff of Rockingham County. He was active in town 
affairs; was Town Clerk, 1825, 1826; Selectman, 1827, 1828 ; 
a member of the Legislature in 1831. He resided at first 
in the house built by his father-in-law, on the old Parade 
ground, till his father presented him with the homestead, 
Oct. 1, 1820, having built a new house for himself. 

Children, born in Northwood : 

i. Sarah Elizabeth 8 Harvey, b. Feb. 8, 1819 ; d. April 16,- 

1853, in Exeter, N. H. ; m. , Andrew Simpson, b. 

Jan. 7, 1809, d. Jan. 19, 1877, aet. 68, near Boston, 
and son of John Simpson and Abigail Gile, his wife, of 
Nottingham, N. H., who m. (2), 1854, Almira Gage, of 
Concord, N. H. 

ii. John Mead 8 Harvey, b. March 6, 1821; d. March 19, 1848, 
in Manchester; m. June — , 1841, Mary Elizabeth Batch- 
elder, b. May 22, 1823, and dau. of Capt. Levi Batchelder 
and Mary Sherburne, his wife, of Northwood. She m. 
(2), Aug. 1, 1850, Dr. John S. Elliott, of Manchester, 
who d. Nov. 29, 187c. 



Sixth Generation. 33 

They had one dau., born in Northwood : 

1. Arianna Wallace* Harvey, b. , 1845 ; d. May 15, 

1848. 

hi. Charles 8 Harvey, b. , 1823; d. Sept. 5, 1824, aet. 1 y., 

5 m., 22 d. (g. s. Northwood). 
iv. Charles Washington 8 Harvey, b. May 6, 1825 ; d. July 15, 

1886; m. Aug. 21,1849, Mary Elizabeth Williams, b. 

, d. May 17, 1883, of Concord, N. H. He was a 

dry-goods merchant in Concord. 

Children, born in Concord : 

1. Minnie* Harvey, b. May 16, 1852; m. Aug. 21, 1881, 

William Lake. 

2. Edward 9 Harvey, b. Dec. — , 1854; d. June — , 

1872, drowned. 

v. Dolly 8 Harvey, b. , 1827; d. May 11, 182—, in infancy, 

aet. undecipherable (g. s. Northwood). 

vi. Henry Smith 8 Harvey, b. Aug. 26, 1828 ; d. March 25, 
1873, in Pittsrleld, N. H. (g. s. Forthwood) ; m. March 
25, 1848, in Manchester, Ellen Jane Smith, of Plain - 
field, N". H, d. Feb. 3, 1907, aet. 80 y., 10 m., 18 d., in 
Koxbury, and dau. of Benjamin Smith and Lois Daniels, 
his wife. Resided in Manchester and Pittsfield. 

Son, born in Manchester : 

1. George Edward 9 Harvey, b. July 28, 1851; d. Feb. 
14, 1896, in Roxbury; m. Dec. 30, 1874, at Cam- 
bridge, Ellen Emeline Kelsey, of Clinton, Conn., 
dau. of Benjamin Alvah Kelsey and Cynthia 
Maria L'Hommedieu, his wife. He was engaged 
in the grocery business in Lawrence and Rox- 
bury. 

Children, born in Roxbury: 

i. William Henry 10 Harvey, b. March 16, 1879. 
ii. Eva Gertrude 10 Harvey, b. June 25, 1880. 

vii. George Matthew 8 Harvey, b. June 10, 1830 ; d. April 8, 
1856, in Sacramento, Cal. ; unm. 



■ 



34 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

viii. Edward Ervin 8 Harvey, b. July 20, 1832; d. July 15, 1885, 
at Siegler Springs, Lake Co., Cal.; m. July 18, 1855, 
Georgianna Estabrook, b. July 25, 1834, dau. of Wil- 
liam Winship Estabrook and Mary Ann Damon, his 
wife, of Concord. He was a merchant in Concord, and 
removed to San Erancisco, Cal. 

Son, born in Concord : 

1. Frederick Estabrook 9 Harvey, b. Nov. 28, 1871; m. 
March 23, 1898, Bina Cannel, dau. of Thomas 
Cannel and Elizabeth Poynter, his wife. Is First 
Assistant Government Surveyor in the Hawaiian 
Islands ; has been there some six years ; he is 
head man of the Government Survey, and has six 
or more men under him ; address, Honolulu. 
His family were in San Francisco, visiting his 
mother, during the earthquake of 1906, but were 
not injured and lost nothing. 

Children : 

i. Frederick Harold 10 Harvey, b. March 13, 1900, 

in Payson, Utah, 
ii. Georgianna Estabrook 10 Harvey, b. Nov. 6, 1902, 
in Honolulu, T. H. 

ix. Dolly Maria 8 Harvey, b. Sept. 20, 1834 ; m. Sept. 5, 1854, 
in Manchester, Edward Hogan Berry, b. May 14, 1829, 
d. Dec. 18, 1898, in Oconomowoc, Wis., and son of John 
Berry, of Pittsfield, N. H. He was engaged in the in- 
surance business ; was for twenty years, till his death, 
agent for the State of Wisconsin of the London, Liver- 
pool & Globe Insurance Co. 

Children : 

1. Russell Edward 9 Berry, b. June 2, 1855, in Pitts- 

field ; m. Aug. 6, 1889, Nanna Kellogg, in Mil- 
waukee, Wis. Besides (1907) in Silver City, New 
Mexico. Had a dau., b. Dec. 17, 1890 ; d. Oct. 
19, 1901. 

2. Lizzie Harvey 9 Berry, b. May 20, 1859, in Faribault, 

Minn.; d. July 28, 1865. 



Sixth G-eneration. 35 

3. Adah Belle Berry, b. Oct. 30, 1871, in Sun Prairie, 
Wis.; m. Dec. 15, 1897, Julius Wechselburg, of 
Milwaukee, where they reside. 

Children : 

i. Edward Franklin 10 Wechselburg, b. Sept. 3, 

1898. 
ii. Edith™ Wechselburg, b. Jan. 20, 1902. 

39 Charles, 7 b. Dec. 21, 1802 ; d. May 17, 1823 (g. s.). In 1819 

Rev. Mr. Prentice organized a Sunday School of young men, 
and Charles Harvey was one of the four members. 

Children by his second marriage : 

40 Margaret Ann, 7 b. Nov. 15, 1815; d. May 25, 1888, in 

Exeter, N. H.; m. June 12, 1842, Solomon Clark Buzell, of 
Northwood, b. June 11, 1806, d. Aug. 17, 1882, in Exeter, 
and son of Solomon Buzell and Susanna Clark, his wife. 
In 1825, Mr. Buzell went to Boston and for some eleven 
years was engaged in a mercantile firm. He then returned 
to Northwood. In 1852, he sold his farm, the old Harvey 
homestead, and removed to Exeter, where for many years 
he was Treasurer of Philips Exeter Academy. He was a 
very w r orthy and upright man. They had one son, born in 
Northwood : 

i. Albert Clark 8 Buzell, b. Dec. 11, 1844. He graduated at 
Harvard in 1865, and at Dane Law School in 1868 ; is a 
lawyer and resides in Exeter. 

41 Dorothy Wentworth, 7 b. May 7, 1817; d. April 24, 1886, in 
Lawrence ; buried in Andover, in the family lot ; m. Feb. 
27, 1838, James Augustus 7 Treat, of Pittsfield, N. II., b. 
April 13, 1806, in Boston, d. March 10, 1887, in Lawrence, 
and son of Capt. Samuel 6 Treat and Helena Merlino de St. 
Pry, his wife. Her father, Bennette Claude Merlino de 
St. Pry, was a native of Lyons, France, and came to America 
and settled in Boston as early as 1775. Gen. Lafayette was 
her sponsor in baptism, and several letters from him to her 
are still preserved. Capt. Treat was an officer in the Mas- 



36 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

sachusetts troops for twenty-one years during and subse- 
quent to the Revolution. He was a direct descendant from 
Gov. Robert 2 Treat, bapt. Feb. 25, 1624, in Pitminster, 
Somerset Co., England, who came with his father, Richard 1 
Treat, bapt. Aug. 28, 1584, and family, to Connecticut in 
1637, and was Deputy Governor and Governor of that Col- 
ony for thirty years. Mr. Treat graduated at Harvard in 
1832. About 1835 he became Agent of the Pittsfield Man- 
ufacturing Co., Pittsfield. In 1856 he removed to Andover, 
Mass., and in 1859 to Lawrence, where he was engaged in 
mercantile business up to the time of his death. (See Treat 
Genealogy.) 

Children, born in Pittsfield : 

i. John Harvey 8 Treat, b. July 23, 1839. He graduated at 
Phillips Andover Academy in 1858-, and at Harvard in 
1862 ; received the degree of A. M. Upon graduating 
he went into the mill supply business with his father 
in Lawrence, and retired in 1892. He is the author of 
Notes on the Kubrics, etc., 1882 ; The Catholic Faith, 
1886 ; Truro Baptisms, 1886 ; Genealogy of the Treat 
Family, 1893 ; Ancestry of Col. John Harvey, 1907; 
The Catacombs of Rome, with a History of the Tombs 
of the Apostles Peter and Paul, with Notes and Illustra- 
tions ; and of many pamphlets. 

He has been a member of various Societies ; among 
them the New England Historic Genealogical Society ; 
Cape Cod Historical Society ; Harleian Society, London, 
Eng. ; American Academy of Political and Social Science, 
Philadelphia, Penn. ; Essex Institute, Salem, Mass. ; 
Masonic Order, a Knight Teniplar ; New Hampshire 
Society of the Cincinnati, and its Vice Pres., 1901, 1902 ; 
by direction of the officers of that Society, the Library 
in the old Colonial house, in Exeter, has been called 
the " John Harvey Treat Koom," and this name appears 
over the door ; he is also a member of the Pepperrell 
Association ; Louisburg Memorial fund, a Member of 
the General Committee ; American Historical Associ- 
ation ; the Somersetshire Archaeological and Natural 



Sixth Generation. 



37 



History Society, Taunton Castle, Taunton, Eng. ; Amer- 
ican Forestry Association ; Military Order of the French 
Alliance, Historian ; and of several others. 

In 1888, he gave Harvard a large and valuable library, 
a catalogue of a portion of which was printed in 1900, 
in Bulletin ~Ko. 36, under the name of " the Treat Col- 
lection of works on Ritualism and Doctrinal Theology ;" 
three sections of the Count Riant Library ; and in 1901, 
a fund to procure every book on the Roman Catacombs, 
and Christian Antiquities of Italy. He took great in- 
terest in the latter subject, and in 1905 and 1906 made 
generous gifts to Prof. Marucchi, the great Christian 
archaeologist, for the purpose of excavating the Cata- 
comb of St. Priscilla, where important discoveries were 
made, for which he received public acknowledgment. 




IN memory of Richard Treat, alias Trott. 

BAPTIZED IN THIS CHURCH AUG:2&. F)&4. WHO EMIGRATED TO 

New England with his family iN W>7 and was created 

ONE OF THE PATENTEES OF THE CHARTER, OF THE COLONy 

of Connecticut. By King Charles 11. in 1662. 
His SoN Robert Treat, was baptized Februa^ 25' 1624. 
aNd was Deputy Governor aNd GoVernorof the COLONy 

for, 50 yEARS. 

This Brass was erected in 1902. By their descendant 
John HARVEy Treat, of America 



&€$CS%B&Z$i 



In 1901, he visited his ancestral town of Pitminster, 
Somerset Co., Eng., and in 1902, erected in the fine old 
church there, a beautiful Brass to commemorate his 
forefathers inscribed as above. 

He also placed in the tower a clock, and a sixth bell, 
to the purchase of which a few subscriptions had already 
been made ; ornamented the old organ, and furnished 
an oak case for the new one ; gave a beautiful brass altar 



38 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

rail and sonic lights ; he lias also made large gifts else- 
where. 

He has crossed the ocean fourteen times, and has 
visited England, France, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy — 
spending much time in Rome, — Spain, the Azores, Ma- 
deira, Gibraltar, Algiers, Malta, Greece, Constantinople 
and the Black Sea, Smyrna and Palestine ; in 1875 he 
travelled over the country east of the Jordan, and Egypt, 
which country he has visited five times, and up the 
Nile as far as the first cataract. In 1900, he visited 
many of the Western States, California, Oregon, Wash- 
ington, and Puget Sound, returning by way of the Can- 
adian Pacific B. R. to Montreal. He resides in summer 
and fall at his villa on the Rangeley Lakes. (See Treat 
Genealogy.) 
ii. James Oberlin 8 Treat, b. Feb. 5, 1841 ; d. Feb. 21, 1904, 
in South Lake Weir, Florida ; buried in Andover, Mass. 
He graduated at Phillips Andover Academy in 1859, 
and went into business with his father in Lawrence. 
Aug. 9, 1802, he enlisted in Co. A, 33d Mass. Reg't, 
Col. Maggi, and was discharged June 30, 1803, ruined 
in health. He received a pension. He was much inter- 
ested in Entomology, and in 1888, he and his brother 
preseuted their collection of insects to the Museum of 
Comparative Zoology connected with Harvard Univer- 
sity, 
iii. Elizabeth Wentworth 8 Treat, b. July 23, 1842; d. Sept, 
S, 1888, in Lawrence ; she was a fine painter. 
i. Helena Merlino 8 Treat, b. May 23, 1849. 

42 George, 7 b. July 1, 1822; d. Feb. 9, 1823 (g. s.). 





SIXTH GENERATION. 



36 SARAH 6 HARVEY (John* John? Joseph? John? Wil- 
liam 1 }, born May 5, 1785, in Northwood ; died June 11, 1874, 
in East Concord, N. H. ; married April 27, 1806, Dea. Jona- 
than 5 Piper, of Stratham, N. H., born Jan. 21, 1781, died 
Aug. 3, 1829, aet. 48 (g. s.), in Northwood, son of Jonathan 
Piper, of Stratham, born July 31, 1742, and Olive Light, his 
wife, of Exeter, N. H., born April 12, 1752. He removed to 
Northwood, where he kept a store, and a tavern. Was a Select- 
man for six terms, from 1809-1814, a Deacon of the Congre- 
gational Church, and a much esteemed citizen. The Piper 
tavern was situated on the main highway and turnpike between 
Concord and the lower towns, Exeter, Dover and Portsmouth. 
The traffic and travel on the road was very great, and as the 
tavern was noted for its neatness and excellent fare, it was 
much patronized. Mrs. Piper, a very capable woman, contrib- 
uted not a little to its success. In 1817, President Monroe 
stopped there, and in the summer of 1825, Lafayette and his 
escort took breakfast at the tavern while on a visit to Dover 
from Concord, and upon their return remained over night. 
Daniel Webster, and other great men were often guests at the 
Piper tavern. 



39 



40 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

Children of Sarah and Jonathan Piper, born in Northwood : 

43 Sherburne Blake 7 Piper, b. May 80, 1807; d. Sept. 20, 

1885, in Lewiston, N. Y. ; m. Nov. 5, 1835, Ann Eliza 
Goodwin, of Lewiston, <lau. of David and Martha Goodwin, 
his wife. He graduated at Dartmouth in 1832. Removed 
to Lewiston and taught the Academy there. Was admitted 
to the Bar in 1837 ; was District Attorney for his County, 
1845-1851; Candidate for Congress 1842, 1844, 1850; in 
1852, was Democratic Elector-at-large, when Franklin 
Pierce was elected President; was ten years a member of 
the Supervisors of his County, and Chairman for five ; was 
a member of the New York Assembly 1870-7. 
Children, born in Lewiston : 

i. Martha 8 Piper, ii. Alexander 8 Piper. 

44 Dolly Harvey Blake 7 Piper, b. June 17, 1809; d. about 

1850, in South Newmarket, N. II. ; unm. 

45 John Light 7 Piper, b. July 28, 1814; d. Dec. 27, 1853, in 

Lewiston; m. , 1839, Ann Eliza Gay lor, who d. , 

in New York city. He was a Book Publisher and spent 
most of his life in Philadelphia and New York city. 
Children: 

i. Charles 8 Piper, ii. Frederick 8 Piper, iii. Grace 8 Piper. 
iv. Alfred 8 Piper, v. Anna 8 Piper. 

46 Sarah Ann Oliva 7 Piper, b. Dec. 20, 1821 ; d. Feb. 8, 1897, 

in Altmar, N. Y. ; m. Jan. 17, 1842, Rev. Winthrop Fifield, 
of Epping, N. PL, b. Jan. 3, 1800, in Salisbury, N. H., d. 
May 9, 1802, in South Newmarket; buried with his wife in 
East Concord, N. II. Was settled in Epsom, East Concord 
and South Newmarket. 
Children : 

i. Charles Winthrop 8 Fifield, b. Feb. 19, 1843, in Epsom, N. 
II., d. Oct. 22, 1905, in Altmar, N. Y. ; m. July 31, 
1883, Florence E. Hadsall. He graduated at Phillips 
Exeter Academy 1859, and at Yale in 1804. Enlisted 
in lst;4 in Co. F, 18th New Hampshire Reg't, and was 



Sixth Generation. 41 

mustered out, in the summer of 1865. In the army he 
contracted heart disease, which prevented him from en- 
tering upon any arduous duty. He entered Yale Divin- 
ity School after the Avar, and graduated in 1S71 ; he was 
afterwards engaged at the Phenix Nursery, Blooming- 
ton. Illinois; in the Life Insurance business, St. Louis, 
Missouri, and later at Altmar, N. Y. 
Children : 

1. Florence B."' Fifield, b. Oct. 5, 1887 ; d. in infancy. 

2. Charles Winthrop* Fifield, b. Oct. 2. 1888; d. in 

infancy. 

ii. Ellen Sophia 8 Fifield, b. Dec. 5, 1845, in Epsom ; m. July 
27, 1865, Judge Alvah Kimball Potter, of Concord, 1ST. 
II., b. March 31, 1840. He entered Dartmouth in 1858, 
but left in Nov., 1861, to enter the army and was com- 
missioned 1st Lieutenant Co. H, 7th Reg't, New Hamp- 
shire Vols., the same month ; he was discharged for 
physical disability in June, 1862. In 1864 he was 
chosen Captain Co. A, 18th New Hampshire Vols. ; 
promoted to be Major in April, 1865, breveted Lieuten- 
ant Colonel and mustered out of service in June, 1865. 
The same year he began the practice of law in Concord. 
In 1868 removed to Niagara Falls, N. Y., and practiced 
law with Charles Harvey Piper till 1S72, when he re- 
moved to Lockport, N. Y., where he became a partner 
with Hon. T. E. Ellsworth, late N. Y. State Senator, 
until the death of that gentleman. He was City Attor- 
ney in 1876 and 1877, and Judge of Niagara County 
from 1883-1889 ; he is a Director of the Niagara County 
Bank, and Commissioner of the State Association at 
Niagara Falls. 

iii. Annie Eliza Goodwin 8 Fifield, b. Dec. 4, 1848, in East 
Concord, N. H. ; m. June 25, 1873, H. G. Howe. 

iv. Sarah Harvey 8 Fifield, b. July 26, 1851, in East Concord ; 
m. June 25, 1873, Samuel P. Merriam, of Concord, who 
has been for man}' years engaged in business in St. Louis, 
Mo. 

Children, the first born in Carlinville, 111., the others in 
St. Luuis. Mo. : 



42 Ancestry of Col. John Harvey. 

1. Winthrop Harvey 9 Merriam, b. Jan. 30, 1875; m. 

, Laura B. Austin. Daughter : Ruth Win- 

nifred 10 Merriam, b. July 22, 1903. 

2. Mary Pecker 9 Merriam, b. April 18, 1877. 

3. Joseph Quincy* Merriam, b. Oct. 4, 1880 ; d. Oct. 

13, 1888. 

4. Lilian Ada 9 Merriam, b. Sept. 4, 1882. 

5. Ruth Ellen 9 Merriam, b. Nov. 13, 1885. 

6. Samuel 9 Merriam, b. May 5, 1891. 

v. John Edward 8 Fifield, b. Nov. 2, 1858, in South New- 
market. 

47 Charles Harvey 7 Piper, b. April 3, 1824; d. May 19, 1892; 
m. June 29, 1858, Charlotte Hulett. He was a lawyer and 
resided at Niagara Falls, N. Y. 
Children : 

i. Edith 8 Piper, ii. Charles Harvey 8 Piper, iii. Theodore 
Hulett 8 Piper, iv. Jonathan Murray 8 Piper, v'. Aure- 
lia 8 Piper, vi. John Winthrop Blake 8 Piper, vii. Hu- 
lett Vincent 8 Piper. 





INDEX. 



Andre, Maj. John 26 
Arnold, Benedict 26 
Austin, Laura B. 42 

Bachiler, Rev. Stephen 32 
Bagley, Orlando 12 
Barnard, Dorathy 19 

Joseph 19 

Robert 5 
Barnes, Rachel 12 

Sarah 12 

William 12 
Batchelder, Adaline 32 

Capt. Henry 32 

Capt. Levi 32 

Mary Elizabeth 32 
Bayley, Col. 24 
Bennett, John 32 

Nellie 32 

Thomas 32 
Berry, Adah Belle 35 

Edward Hogan 34 

John 34 

Lizzie Harvey 34 

Russell Edward 3 4 
Blaisdell, Ezra 10, 14 

John 14 
Blake, Josoph 25 

Sarah 25 

Sherburne 30 



Blydenburg, John 29, 30 
Bradley, Parson Caleb 25, 30 
Buswell, Joseph 10 
Buzele, Albert Clark 35 

Solomon 35 

Solomon Clark 35 

Cannel, Bina 34 

Thomas 34 
Carter, Francis 5 
Chaelis, John 21 
Chase, Enoch 20 

Judith 21 
Cilley, Col. Joseph 2G 
Clark, Susanna 35 
Clarke, Agnes 3 

John 4 
Colby, Elizabeth 22 

Enoch 18 

Isaac 22 

Mary 13 

Theophilus 10 

Thomas 10 
Colles, Joan 5 
Cook, Frederick 27 
Copp, David 7 

Judith 7 

Martha 3, 7 

William 7, S 
Cotter, Eunice 16 



44 



Index. 



Critchett, Benjamin 16 
Currier, Abner 20 

Joannah 10 

John 15 

Mary 19 

Thomas 10 

William 10 

Damon, Mary Ann 34 
Daniels, Lois 33 
Davis, Ann, Anna 14 

Gideon 20 

Sarah 22, 32 
Dearborn, Henry 25-27 

Samuel 25 
D'Estaing, Count 2S 

Eaton, James 18 
Elliott, John S. 32 
Ellsworth, T. E. 41 
Endicott, Gov. John 7 
Estabrook, Georgianna 34 
William Winship 34 

Fellows, Moses 27 

Fifield, Annie Eliza Goodwin 41 

Charles Winthrop 40 

Ellen Sophia 41 

Florence B. 11 

John Edward 41 

Sarah Harvey 41 

Winthrop 40 
Foot, John 9 
Frost, John 31 

Joseph 31 

Margaret 31 
Fogg, Jeremiah 27 
Frye, James 15 

Gage, Almira 32 
Gardiner, Asa Bird 2S 
GAYLOR, Ann Eliza 40 
GEORGE, Susanna 15 t 
Gerrish, Jacob 15 



Gile, Abigail 32 
Gilman, Col. Nicholas 29 
Goodwin, Ann Eliza 40 

David 40 

Martha 40 
Gookin, Daniel 27 
Gray, James 26 
Greenleaf, John 23 

Habsall, Florence E. 40 
Hartwright, Rev. W. R. 4 
IIakvey, Harvie, Havaye, Abi- 
gail 21 

Abner 21 

Agnes 4, 5 

Alice 5 

Ann 10 

Anna 15, 16, 20 

Arianna Wallace 33 

Bridget 5 

Cartret (see Gertrude) 20. 

Charles 33, 35 

Charles Washington 33 

David 21 

Dolly 15-17, 20, 21, 24, 33 

Dolly Maria 34 

Dorathy 12, 14 

Dorothy 21 

Dorothy Wentworth 35 

Edward 33 

Edward Ervin 34 

Elizabeth 4, 5, 10 

Enoch 10 

Enoly (?) (dau.) 21 

Ensign 20 

Eva Gertrude 33 

Fortunatus 11 

Frederick Estabrook 34 

Frederick Harold 34 

George 38 

George Edward 33 

George Matthew 33 

Georgianna Estabrook 34 

Gertrude 16 



Index. 



45 



Harvey (cont'd), Hannah 10, 17, 
18 

Henry Smith 33 

Humphrey 21 

Isaiah 21 

Jacob 15-18 

James 4, 5, 16 

Joan 5 

John 3, 7, 11-20, 23, 25, 31, 32 

John Mead 32 

Jonathan 14-16, 25, 30 

Joseph 6, 13-19, 22, 30 

Judith 13, 14, 16, 21 

Levi 16 

Margaret Ann 35 

Martha 20, 21 

Mary 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 15, 20, 24 

Matthew 5, 10 

Minnie 33 

Miriam 16, 21 

Molly 21, 24 

Moses Sargent 17 

Nicolas 4 

Oscar Jewell 3 

Richard 4, 5 

Ruth 20 

Sally 18 

Sarah 10, 14, 21, 30, 39 

Sarah Elizabeth 32 

Sargeant 15 

Susan 16 

Theophilus 11, 24 

Thomas 4, 5, 7, 9-11, 22 

Thomasino 4, 5 

Timothy 20, 21 

Valentine 21, 22 

William 3-5, 7-10 

William Henry 33 
Hedlock, Susan 16 
Hill, Benjamin 25 
Hodges, William 5 
Howes, H. G. 41 
Hoyt, David W. 6 

Hannah 18 



Hoyt, Matthew 15 
Huckek, Joanna 3 
Hulett, Charlotte 42 
Hunt, Hannah 17 
Nathaniel 17 

Jewell, Mary 19 

Kelley, Jonathan 20 

Martha 20 
Kellog, Nanna 34 
Kelsey, Benjamin Alvah 33 

Ellen Emeline 33 
Kekzae, Hannah 18 

Ladd, Nathaniel 29 
Lafayette, Gen. 35, 39 
Lake, William 33 
Lancaster, Henry 14 
L'Hommedieu, Cynthia Maria 33 
Light, Olive 39 
Louis XVI, King of France 28 

Maggi, Col. 38 
Martin, Abigail 10 

John 10 
Maeucchi, Prof. Orazio 37 
Mead, Benjamin 31 

Betsey 31 
Merriam, Joseph Quincy 42 

Lilian Ada 42 

Mary Pecker 42 

Ruth Ellen 42 

Ruth Winfield 42 

Samuel 42 

Samuel P. 11 

Winthrop Harvey 42 
Monroe, James 39 
Morse, Martha 20 
Moulton, Ruth 21 

William 20, 22 

Norris, James 27 



46 



Index. 



Osgood, Mary 10 

Pki'perrell, Mary 31 

William 31 
Philbbick, Nathan 16 
Pierce, Franklin 40 
Pillsbury, Judith 10 
Piper, Alexander 40 

Alfred 40 

Anna 40 

Aurelia 42 

Charles 40 

Charles Harvey 41, 42 

Dolly Harvey Blake, 40 

Edith 42 

Frederick 40 

Grace 40 

Hulett Vincent 42 

John Light 40 

John Winthrop Blake 42 

Jonathan 39 

Jonathan Murray 42 

Martha 40 

Sarah Ann Oliva 40 

Sherburne Blake 40 

Theodore Hulett 42 
Poole, Anthony 5 
Potter, Alvah Kimball 41 
Povnter, Elizabeth 34 
Prentice, Rev. Josiah 35 

Quimby, William 21 
Quinby, Azuba 20, 30 

Joseph 26, 27, 30 

Lillian 27 

Randlett, Betsey Hi 
Ring, David 17 
Robinson, Thomas 10 
Rogers, Samuel 17 
Row i; Li., Mary 10 

Sarah '.) 

Thomas 12 
Russell, Seth 21 



Sanders, James 9 
Sargent, Amasa 17 

Anna 17, 18 

Benjamin 21 

Cartaret, Cartret, see Gertrude. 

Christopher 17, 18 

Gertrude 20 

Hannah 10 

Jacob 13 

Joseph 21 

Mary 21 

Philip 10 

Polly 18 

Rachel 10 

Rhoda 17 

Sarah 15 

Stephen 15, 17 

Timothy 15 

William 13 
Sherburne, Mary 32 
Simpson, Andrew 32 

John 32 
Slocum, Martha 7 
Smith, Benjamin 33 

Ellen Jane 33 
Stark, John 25 
Stevens, Ebenezar 14 
St. Pry, Bennotte Claude Merlino 
de 35 

Helena Merlino 35 
Sullivan, John 20, 27 

Tewxbery, Tewxbury, see Tux- 
bury. 
Titcomb, Oliver 15 

Richard 15 
Treat, Elizabeth Weutworth 38 

Helena Merlino 38 

James Augustus 35 

James Oberlin 38 

John Harvey 36 

Richard 30, 37 

Robert 30, 37 ^ 

Capt. Samuel 35 



Index. 



47 



Tucker, Benjamin 19 
Tuxbury, Hannah 9 

Henry 7-9 

John 9 

Martha 8, 9 

Mary 9 

Naomy 9 

Ruth 9 

Wadleigh, Martha 17 
Wales, Nathaniel 15 
Wall, Elizabeth 5 

Thomas 5 
Washington, Gen. George 2S 
Webster, Daniel 39 



Webster, Stephen 24 
Wechselburg, Edith 35 

Edward Franklin 35 

Julius 35 
Weed, Mary 10 
Welch, Joseph 17 

Sarah 17 
Wentworth, Dorothy Frost 31 

John 31 

William 31 
Whittle, Mary 23 

Thomas 23 
Williams, Mary 15 

Mary Elizabeth 33 
Worthen, Augusta Harvey 6 




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